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Competing Demands from Aging Parents and Adult Children in Two Cohorts of American Women
Authors:Emily E Wiemers  Suzanne M Bianchi
Institution:1. Assistant Professor, Department of EconomicsUniversity of Massachusetts Boston;2. At the time of her death in November 2013, Dorothy Meier Chair in Social Equities and Distinguished Professor of Sociology, University of California, Los Angeles
Abstract:In late middle age, individuals may face competing demands on their time and financial resources from elderly parents and young adult children. This study uses the Panel Study of Income Dynamics to examine changes over time in the probability of having children and living parents for women aged 45 to 64. We compare two cohorts: those born in the 1920s and 1930s and those born in the 1940s and 1950s. We find that there has been a dramatic increase in the probability of having children and living parents and that this increase has been driven mainly by changes in life expectancy of the parent generation. We further examine transfers of money and co‐residence for women in the later cohort. We find that while women may not give to parents and children concurrently, approximately 30 percent of them have provided support to both parents and children at some point in the past.
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